BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of The Invention
The invention relates to a stimulation system of the type wherein a stimulation unit is connected to skeletal muscle by implantable electrodes and controlled by a pacemaker.
2. Background Information
Severe therapy resistant cardiac insufficiency -- a significant problem because of its frequency of occurrence and mortality -- can be treated with the technology of cardiomyoplasty.
In cardiac surgery there is generally a great demand for systems which are able to fully or partially take over the heart's pumping function. Cardiomyoplasty -- this promising method which has been in clinical use since 1985 -- is a technique for functionally replacing the loss of cardiac muscle tissue by skeletal muscles, particularly by the latissimus dorsi muscle (LDM). Surgical interventions are known to have been performed in cardiac patients to support heart contractions by placing a striated skeletal muscle of the patient's own body, preferably from the area of his back, completely or partially around the heart.
It is also known that this skeletal muscle can be trained by chronic electrostimulation for six weeks with low frequencies around 2 to 10 Hz whereupon it becomes relatively resistant to fatigue. The conversion of the muscle tissue, which is composed originally of types of muscle fibers, is here effected in such a way that the more fatigue resistant type is in the majority at the end of conditioning.
Stimulation systems have been developed which emit individual pulses in short succession (burst stimulators). Since the skeletal latissimus dorsi muscle (LDM) stimulated by an individual pulse reacts with a contraction that last about 70 ms, but the time period of the systole of the heart lasts 200 to 250 ms, the muscle contraction is electronically adapted to the time curve of the heart contraction. The duration of the contraction is then extended to correspond to the burst duration. Such a known implantable pacemaker is constructed of two channels, with each channel including a receiving unit, a synchronizing unit and an output unit.
The drawback in the prior art system is the fact that the stimulation is always effected with constant values and is thus not adapted to the momentary physical stress.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is thus the object of the invention to stimulate a skeletal muscle (latissimus dorsi muscle) employed to support the heart muscle so that it is able to perform the same function as the heart muscle.
This is accomplished by controlling stimulation intensity to follow value representative of momentary physical stress and cardiovascular requirement.
The invention is based on the realization that it is not only the escape sequence derived from the sensor output signal and/or from the heart rhythm but also the stimulation intensity that must be closely adapted to the actual, momentary physiological demands of the patient. In this connection, the stimulation of the skeletal muscle must be adapted to the particular type of stimulation conduction.
According to the invention, a stimulation system is provided for a skeletal muscle that has been placed around the patient's heart to additionally support cardiac contractions, wherein the stimulation pulses are derived from the output signals of a suitable physiological cardiac pacemaker and correspond to the patient's actual, momentary physiological requirements.
This involves, in particular, the detection of the state of the autonomous (vegetative) nervous system and information derived therefrom to stimulate, excite and activate the skeletal muscle employed to support the heart muscle in such a graduated manner that it is tuned to the physiological requirements of the total organism in a hemodynamic and metabolic respect.
In an advantageous manner, the skeletal muscle is stimulated by an electrical pulse generator which provides a series of pulses whose stimulating parameters are set in the manner to be described below by values that are directly or indirectly derived from the state of the autonomous nervous system.
The charging of the electrodes connected with the skeletal muscle is effected by way of the stimulation unit and by the pacemaker, on the one hand, at a certain automatically adjustable rate R of the stimulation pulses and, on the other hand, corresponding to a value representative of the momentary physical stress and the cardiovascular requirement, by means of a stimulation power, particularly amplitude and duration, and/or by means of a variable number of electrodes that are actuated in each case.
If the heart's own rhythm is correct, the value representative of the momentary physical stress and the cardiovascular requirement is formed by the body's heart rate.
If the heart's own rhythm is absent, stimulation pulses of a defined rate are generated by the cardiac pacemaker.
If the heart rate exceeds a certain programmable value, the ratio of cardiac action to muscle contraction is changed and the pulse power applied to the electrodes is increased. As a function of the value representative of the momentary physical stress or the cardiovascular requirement, the rate is stepped down at a ratio to the natural rhythm or, if there is no natural rhythm, to the rhythm stimulated by the conventional pacemaker to a degree depending on this stress, with the reduction ratio decreasing with increasing physical stress or cardiovascular requirement until the ratio of 1:1 is reached.
On the part of the cardiac pacemaker, the value representative of the momentary physical stress is generated, if the heart's own rhythm is absent, from a sensor signal for the patient's activity or from a secondary value representing the stress on the circulatory system, such as the temperature of the blood, the oxygen saturation of the blood or the pH value of the blood.
A further physiological check of the stimulation intensity can be effected with a value that is a direct measure of the internal cardiovascular requirement for heart output and not -- as the pacemakers controlled by the patient--s activity -- a value derived from the output requirement by way of an external parameter.
An analysis of circulation hemodynamics indicates that cardiovascular output can be described sufficiently in the form of a (negative feedback controlled) system. The average arterial blood pressure is the controlled value and the cardiac output requirement is the controlling variable. Under physiological conditions, the short-term control of the average arterial blood pressure works well. All demands on the cardiovascular system are held in equilibrium and therefore furnish reliable perfusion of the tissue.
Most demands on the cardiovascular system influence the peripheral vascular resistance. The most relevant of these demands are: physical activity, skin temperature and the core temperature of the body, the acid level, the equilibrium and body posture. One of the demands influences the resistive as well as the capacitive characteristics of the periphery by changing the constriction of the arterioles or venules. The secondary effects are changes in vascular resistance, in blood pressure, in venal return flow and in cardiac output. For example, vascular resistance may change five fold during physical activity. To keep the blood pressure constant, venal return flow and cardiac output must be changed correspondingly in the opposite direction.
Cardiac output requirement is the controlling value. It is the product of the heart rate and stroke volume.
Changes in cardiac output requirement are in an inverse relationship to the changes in vascular resistance with the result that the average arterial blood pressure is held essentially constant. Under physiological conditions, the adaptation of the cardiac output requirement to the changes in vascular resistance is effected by a (closed loop feedback) system including baroreceptors operating as pressure sensors in the aortal arc and in the carotid sinus. The output signals of these baroreceptors are fed to the medullar cardiovascular centers. These centers send output signals to the heart by way of the sympathetic or the parasympathetic nervous system.
The sympathetic nervous system regulates the sine frequency and the ventricular stroke volume. The parasympathetic nervous system, in contrast, influences primarily the heart rate. The combination of chronotropic and inotropic factors together lead to a control of the cardiac output. Other variables which influence the heart on the basis of the same external paths are, among others: pain, emotion and physiological stress.
In patients suffering from chronotropic insufficiency, the feedback mechanism with which the heart rate is regulated by way of the sinoatrial node is interrupted. As a consequence, these patients are able to react to stress only by a change in the stroke volume. However, the possible change in the stroke volume is very slight during physical activity.
The chronotropic component in the cardiac output reserve can be restored in that the natural stimulation device is replaced by an artificial one.
Stimulation theory offers several different strategies for counteracting the influence of stress on the circulatory system:
(1) open-loop control is employed in many frequency adaptive cardiac pacemakers;
(2) output demand is related to stress in that the cardiac output is adapted to the calculated output requirement; temperature and breathing controlled cardiac pacemakers belong to this category;
(3) physiologically controlled in which the measured signal directly reflects the circulatory system requirements.
A central, easily reproducible value decisive for cardiovascular requirements and furnished by the autonomous nervous system (ANS) is the regionally operative increase (ROI) of the intracardial impedance of the right ventricle. The interval in which the change is generally the greatest during isovolumetric contraction and here again the region exhibiting the greatest change during changes in stress on the patient are selected with preference. Thus, the determined signal has useful characteristics which result in it being preferably suitable as a control signal for the parameters of the cardiac pacemaker that determine cardiac output.
The regionally operative increase is inversely proportional to myocardial contractility. The greater the contractility, the faster it must be possible to build up the pressure required to open the ventricular valves of the heart.
The ANS here provides autonomous nerve information that is substantially independent of further influential values and is representative of the cardiac output requirement. It exhibits an inotropic behavior indicative of cardiovascular requirements as a control signal for the re-establishment of chronotropic behavior and constitutes a value that is decisive for the modulation of contractility.
In particular, ventricular contractility is under sympathetic control. Since the pre-injection phase is related to contractility, changes in the ANS can be employed to monitor changes in the sympathetic tonus.
Since the contractility of the left ventricle is part of the region of the circulatory system that is under higher pressure, the ANS is defined with respect to this chamber. However, the right ventricle is better suited for intracardial measurements of the ANS.
ANS signals measured in the right and left ventricle during physical activity exhibit an excellent relationship to one another, although the ANS signals from the left ventricle are slightly longer than the ANS signals from the right ventricle.
The task of constructing a cardiac pacemaker that employs ANS signals as its control signals, is converted to the task of being able to measure an ANS related value with sufficient accuracy. One method is based on intracardial impedance measurements. It has been found that the intraventricular volume can be measured by way of the impedance. These measurements were made with an arrangement of multiple electrodes in the respective ventricle. It is not necessary to measure the absolute value of the volume in order to determine the end of the ANS signals. It is sufficient to determine the point in time at which the volume begins to change. It has been found that sufficient resolution can be attained with a unipolar electrode that is disposed in the ventricle, in which case the cardiac pacemaker housing serves as the counter-electrode.
Thus, the value representative of cardiovascular requirements is an autonomous nervous system information that is substantially independent of further influential values. This information is obtained by impedance plethysmography. The autonomous nervous system information is a regionally operative increase in conductivity in the right ventricle, particularly in the region of maximum conductivity change during isovolumetric contraction, with this region being selected by means of a time window. Preferred is a region in which a maximum conductivity change can be determined upon a change in stress.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Advantageous features of the invention are defined in the dependent claims and will be described in greater detail below together with a description of the preferred embodiment of the invention and with reference to the drawing figures, in which:
FIG. 1 is a block circuit diagram of an advantageous embodiment of the stimulation system according to the invention; and
FIG. 2 is a block circuit diagram of the signal processing circuit of the system of FIG. 1.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
In the stimulation system according to the invention --shown in FIG. 1 -- a signal processing circuit 1 generates stimulation pulses which are detected from the output signals HR and tst of a cardiac pacemaker 2. The output signal for the heart rate HR is here fed to a programmable evaluation unit 4 which is configured, in particular, as a decoder, and the output signal for the moment of stimulation tst is fed to an adjustable synchronization unit 5 which is configured, in particular, as a divider. Additionally, a programming unit 3 is connected with cardiac pacemaker 2, with decoder 4 and with signal processing circuit 1, each being programmable and having appropriate programming inputs. A control unit 6 (FIG. 2) turns signal processing circuit 1 on and off.
The value representative of the momentary physical stress and the cardiovascular requirement, respectively, if the heart's own rhythm is in order, is formed by its heart rate HR and, if the heart's own rhythm is absent, by a heart rate HR generated by the cardiac pacemaker 2.
The programmable decoder 4 permits the derivation of different factors n from the heart rate HR. A division by the factor n=1 here corresponds, for example, to the control known as the Medtronic synchronous pacemaker or to stimulation initiated by a natural signal, respectively. As a function of the value HR representative of the momentary physical stress or cardiovascular requirement, the heart rate is stepped down at a ratio, that is a function of this stress, to the natural rhythm -- or if there is no natural rhythm -- to the rhythm stimulated by the conventional pacemaker, with the reduction ratio decreasing with increasing physical stress and cardiovascular requirement, respectively, to a ratio of 1:1 .
According to the invention, decoder 4 is provided with outputs for selecting and actuating the electrodes with the necessary power.
The programmable signal processing circuit 1 according to the invention is shown in the block circuit diagram according to FIG. 2.
The control unit 6, which can be turned on and off, is connected, on the one hand, with a voltage doubling circuit 7 and, on the other hand, directly and indirectly by way of a circuit equipped with programming inputs a1 to an for setting the burst length 9 by means of a burst timer 8. When actuated by the divider, the burst timer 8 counts five to eight pulses according to the preset burst length TB. These pulses output by the divider 5 and required to generate a burst duration TB that is synchronized with the heart stimulation are synchronized by the triggering pulse output by the cardiac pacemaker 2 at stimulation moment tst and are present at at least one input d of burst timer 8.
The output of burst timer 8 is connected with the control input of a programmable start-stop oscillator 10 which emits, corresponding to the stimulation mode set by burst length setting circuit 9, that is, during the burst duration TB, short pulses having a time duration of Tp =0.2 to 1 ms at an excitation frequency f=15 to 40 Hz. A change in the pulse interval Ti =1/f by way of programming inputs il to in that are connected with programming unit 3 influences the contraction force by way of a change in the excitation rate and thus also a change in the force generated by an individual motor unit (temporal summation).
Voltage doubling circuit 7 preferably generates -5.6 V as the operating voltage for a power stage 11 from the supply voltage Us=2.8 V of existing suitable pacemakers. This power stage 11 amplifies the power of the output pulses of start-stop oscillator 10 as a function of the automatic programmable setting effected by way of control inputs b1 to bn. For this purpose, control inputs b1 to bn are connected with the corresponding outputs of the programmable decoder 4. With increased activity, the heart is increasingly supported by the skeletal muscle since an increase in the pulse width Ti and/or the pulse amplitude U amplifies the contraction force of the muscle by way of an increase in the activated motor units (spatial recruitment).
Control inputs c1 to cn of a component group 12 connected with power stage 11 for the selection of at least one electrode E1 to En to be connected to its output with a defined time delay are also connected with corresponding outputs of programmable decoder 4. Thus, a comparable stimulation line present in the heart can be simulated in the skeletal muscle and/or, if actuated simultaneously, the stimulation intensity can be increased. For each electrode E1 to En an output network including a protective circuit is provided in component group 12.
The electrical signals from the heart are received by a sensor electrode, not shown in FIG. 1, which is disposed intramurally in the wall of the right ventricle and, if required, if the heart rate drops below a programmed value, the heart muscle is stimulated by way of the same electrode.
If, however, the heart rate exceeds a certain preprogrammed value, the electrodes of the muscle stimulation channel are activated -- possibly after the expiration of a programmed delay period -- in order to put out a burst pulse for the latissimus dorsi muscle (LDM) by way of at least two electrodes. The burst duration TB determines the duration of the contraction of the muscle.
As soon as, the heart rate exceeds a further pre-programmed value, however, the ratio of cardiac action to the number of muscle stimulations is automatically changed, with the stimulation mode m remaining the same. The ratio m of heart contractions to muscle contractions is a function of the value set by way of the programmable burst length setting circuit 9.
The electrodes of each muscle stimulation channel are composed of a flexible platinum/iridium nitride coated wire provided with a silicone insulation that is arranged outside the muscle in such a way that no conductive electrode components remain outside the muscle. They may be positioned perineural preferably, however, intramuscular in the direct proximity of the nerve branches in that a non-resorbable thread fastened to the distal end of each electrode and equipped with a bent needle provided to pierce the muscle is pulled through the muscle. Once the electrode has been put in place, the insulation is pushed up to the muscle epimysium and is fixed there. An electrode serving as cathode is placed in the region of the proximal branch of the nerve to the latissimus dorsi muscle (LDM) and the electrode serving as anode a few centimeters distal thereof.
By means of programming unit 3 it is possible to indirectly change, by associating a factor n with the representative heart rate HR, the number of individual pulses within a burst and the stimulation mode, respectively, the pulse interval Ti =1/f where f=15 to 40 Hz, and the burst duration TB as well as the power by way of the pulse amplitude U and/or the pulse width tp . Preferably, the following parameters are set for standard stimulation: pulse width Tp =210 μs, pulse interval Ti =30 ms, pulse amplitude U=5 V, burst duration TB =185 ms for a stimulation mode of 1:1 to 1:8 .
The present invention is not limited in its embodiments to the above-described preferred embodiment. Rather, a number of variations are conceivable which take advantage of the described solution even for basically different configurations.